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Lyceum 2013 Summer Camp

Clio’s Kids: A History Mini-Camp : To and Fro and Away we Go!

Following our camp theme, “To and Fro and Away We Go!” we explored the history of transportation and travel to and within the City of Alexandria in the past and present day. Each day of camp we played games, read stories, and visited places related to different aspects of transportation and travel. Look below to find more books to read, local places to visit, and websites to learn more about our camp theme.

We had fun playing transportation bingo and a transportation version of musical chairs.

We enjoyed a story about a man named Stormy and his railroad hat before making a railroad hat of our own. Then we visited the Wilkes Street railroad tunnel.

Our goofy camp photograph!

We learned about travel in the past at Gadsby's Tavern Museum.

We looked at souvenirs from the past, including this plate with pictures of Alexandria Landmarks. Then we made our own souvenir plate to take home to help us remember all the fun things we did in summer camp!

Learn More About It!

Read More About It!: Books to Read

Travel and Transportation - General

Angleberger, Tom, and Cece Bell. Crankee Doodle. New York: Clarion Books, 2013. This fun re-imagining of the familiar song features a bored Yankee Doodle and his talking pony. As his upbeat companion makes suggestions about things they could do (“We could go to town.” You could buy a feather for your hat!”) Yankee Doodle comes up with reasons why he doesn’t want to. We enjoyed this book as our second story on the first day of camp. This book is available at Alexandria, Fairfax, and Arlington libraries.

McClintock, Barbara. Adèle & Simon in America. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008. Siblings Adèle & Simon travel with their aunt by train around early twentieth-century America. There are so many sights that Simon loses track of something he brought with him at each stop. As they travel from New York City to the west coast and return (by way of Washington, D.C.) there is much to see in McClintock’s beautifully detailed illustrations, including many ways to travel – including Boston’s Swan Boats, Chicago’s streetcars, Rocky Mountain burros, St. Louis’s steamboats, and a cameo appearance by the Lusitania, the ship that Adèle & Simon arrived on. Maps show the places Adèle & Simon visited and where Simon lost each item; at the back, the author provides background information on each scene, as well as hidden things and people to look for. We read this book on our first day of camp. It is available at Alexandria, Fairfax, and Arlington libraries.

Mayo, Margaret, and Alex Ayliffe. Choo Choo Clickety-Clack! Minneapolis, Minn: Carolrhoda Books, 2004. This book for younger children uses rhythmic words to imitate the sounds of each kind of transportation it depicts, in bright, bold illustrations. This book is available at Alexandria, Fairfax, and Arlington libraries.

Nelson, Robin. Transportation Then and Now. Minneapolis: Lerner Publications Co, 2003. An introductory non-fiction book which uses photographs and simple text to compare past modes of transportation with those we use today. It includes a Transportation timeline, facts, and glossary. You can find Transportation Then and Now in the Alexandria library.

Seuss, Dr. And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street. New York: Random House, 1964. Walking along Mulberry Street, Marco imagines a succession of fantastic vehicles to tell his father about when he returns home from school. This book is available in Alexandria, Fairfax, and Arlington libraries.

Rails and Trains

Kimmel, Eric A., and Andrea U'Ren. Stormy's Hat: Just Right for a Railroad Man. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2008. George “Stormy” Kromer, a railroad engineer in the early 1900s, can’t find a good hat to wear to work. His derby blows off his head, a cowboy hat flops in the way and gets dirty, cinders from the train’s firebox set a newspaper pressman’s paper hat on fire, and a fireman’s hat is so heavy it gives him a headache! How can he find just the right hat for the job? He can’t, until he listens to his wife Ida, who designs and sews a special hat for him that is just right – the engineer’s hat we know today! The author’s note at the end describes the true story on which this book is based. We read this story before making a railroad hat of our own. The book is in Alexandria and Fairfax libraries.

Lenski, Lois. The Little Train. New York: Random House, 2000. Young readers learn how trains work as Engineer Small drives his coal-powered locomotive and passenger train from Tinytown through the countryside to the city. Originally published in 1940, you can find The Little Train at Alexandria, Fairfax, and Arlington libraries.

O'Brien, Patrick. Steam, Smoke, and Steel: Back in Time with Trains. Watertown, MA: Charlesbridge, 2000. Learn about the development of trains through the eyes of a boy as he relates his family’s history driving trains. Illustrations show different aspects of train travel and how trains function. The text is aimed at older elementary school children, so parents and campers may want to read this book together. You can find this book in Alexandria and Arlington libraries.

Rivers, Boats, and Lighthouses

Flack, Marjorie, and Jay Hyde Barnum. The Boats on the River. New York: The Viking Press, 1946. The text and illustrations of Flack’s 1947 Caldecott honor book evoke a bustling day in the life of the Hudson River and New York City mid-1940s. The book is available in Arlington and Fairfax libraries.

Henderson, Kathy, and Patrick Benson. The Little Boat. Cambridge, Mass: Candlewick Press, 1995. A little boy at the beach uses found objects – a piece of Styrofoam, a stick, and string – to build a toy sailboat. The book follows his little boat’s journey after it drifts out to sea until another child on another beach finds it. Imagine the journey the little boats we made during camp could have! You can find a copy of this book in Alexandria libraries.

Lenski, Lois. The Little Sailboat. New York: Random House, 2003. Lenski’s text and illustrations introduce sailing terms to young readers as they follow Captain Small and his dog, Tinker, on an afternoon of sailing, fishing, and swimming on his sailboat. As a storm blows in, Captain Small and Tinker return to the dock, safe and dry. Originally published in 1937, you can find this book in Lenski’s Mr. Small series at Alexandria and Fairfax libraries.

Swift, Hildegarde Hoyt, and Lynd Ward. The Little Red Lighthouse and the Great Gray Bridge. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co, 1942. A little lighthouse on the Hudson River discovers its warning light and bell are still needed, even after it finds itself in the shadow of the newly-built George Washington Bridge. This book is available at Alexandria, Fairfax, and Arlington libraries.

Taverns

Barnes, Cheryl Shaw. Alexander, the Old Town Mouse. Alexandria, Va: Vacation Spot Pub, 1994. Barnes’s book follows Alexander M. Mouse around Old Town Alexandria as he prepares for the Mousequerade Ball at Gadsby’s Tavern. We read this book in the ballroom during our visit to Gadsby’s Tavern Museum. You can find Alexander, the Old Town Mouse in Alexandria and Fairfax libraries, or in The Lyceum’s Museum Shop.

Let’s Do It!: Kids Activities on the Web

The New York Transit Museum’s online resources include child-oriented virtual exhibits and games. Children can follow a day in the life of a New York City bus, unscramble a city transit map, or use a magnifying glass to take a closer look at a horse-drawn streetcar.

Otto the Auto and his friends introduce children to road safety through songs, stories, and games, including printable activities and coloring sheets. Operated by the California State Automobile Association (CSAA) affiliate of the American Automobile Association.

This website is a spin-off of the “Postcards from Buster” segment on Public Broadcasting Service’s (PBS) children’s television show “Arthur” – Arthur’s friend Buster Bunny visits a different place in the world each episode. Buster has written a blog entry for each place he has visited, and there are related songs, video clips, on-line games, and recipes. Parents can click on the “Parents and Teachers” tab to see additional resources.

Let’s See It!: Places to Visit and Learn More

Over two hundred years ago, visitors to Alexandria might have found overnight lodging in Gadsby’s Tavern or one of the many taverns like it. Visit Gadbsy’s Tavern Museum today to learn about community events, meetings, and dances that taverns like Gadsby’s hosted in their dining and ballrooms. We visited Gadsby’s Tavern Museum on the third day of camp. We learned that traveling in the past was not as fancy as today – you might even have to share a bedroom with strangers!

Parents can learn more about the history of the Wilkes Street tunnel by reading former City Archaeologist Pam Cressey’s article. The Wilkes Street Tunnel was built as a railroad tunnel in 1851. It helped link Alexandria’s wharves on the Potomac River with towns in central Virginia so people and goods could move between the two places. Today, it is used by bicyclists and walkers. We visited Wilkes Street Tunnel on the second day of camp and pretended to be a train as we moved through the tunnel – Woo-hoo!

Learn about America’s transportation history in this exhibition – from trains to buses and streetcars to automobiles – during your visit to "America on the Move". Download the exhibition's 10-page Family Guide before your visit and take it with you! You can also view an online version of “America on the Move” and browse photographs of the Smithsonian’s transportation collection; children will enjoy the transportation-themed games on the website.

Visitors to the B & O Railroad Museum in Baltimore can step inside historic locomotives and train cars, see scale model train replicas in action, as well as train-related objects on exhibition. There are indoor and outdoor children’s play areas. For an additional fee, visitors can enjoy a 20-minute train ride. Families looking to visit smaller railroad museums closer to home may wish to visit Fairfax Station Railroad Museum in Fairfax Station, VA or theManassas Railroad Depot, part of the Manassas Museum System in Manassas, VA.

This museum is located at the College Park airport, founded in 1909 when the Wright brothers started to train military aviators. The museum has hands-on and interpretive exhibits which engage young visitors. Family-friendly programs and events are offered throughout the year, including “Afternoon Aviators”, a weekly series of aviation-themed activities for children aged five and older on Friday afternoons.

Learn about the streetcars that moved people into and around D.C. from the late 1800s until 1962. Open weekends and select Thursdays and Fridays during the year, the museum offers special children’s programming on Thursdays and Fridays during the summer including storytelling and crafts. The museum offers rides on its historic streetcars for an additional fee.